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Indonesians rally over soaring food prices
About 500 Indonesian Muslims took to the streets of the capital to demand the government to bring down food prices after media reported cases of starvation.
Jakarta: About 500 Indonesian Muslims took to the streets of the capital to demand the government to bring down food prices, after media reported cases of starvation.
The protesters, from the Muslim group Hizbut Tahrir
Indonesia, marched through Jakarta's main streets to the presidential palace, chanting "Allahu Akbar" (God is Great).
The Surya newspaper said a schoolboy in East Java, who lived with his elderly grandmother in Magetan district, hanged himself in February because he could not bear the pain of starvation. Neighbours said the family was very poor.
A website had reported earlier this month that a pregnant woman who lived in a rented room with her three children died because she had not eaten for three days.
"People have died of hunger, babies are suffering from severe malnutrition because they can't get proper treatment," Hizbut Tahrir spokesman, Muhammad Ismail Yusanto, told Reuters.
"How is it possible that in an agricultural nation that has been independent for more than 60 years, many people have died of hunger?"
Soaring global prices of rice and other staples are hitting Asia's poorest citizens.
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